News & Tips
Training
Chats
Top Story
Public TV, Radio Stations to Increase Local Investigative Coverage
Most Recent Articles
1.
Poynter's Times Publishing Co. sells Governing
5:15 PM Nov. 20, 2009
2.
Recommendation for Fewer PAP Screens Sure to Set Off Controversy
10:32 AM Nov. 20, 2009
3.
Gene Patterson to Jack Nelson: Save Us a Desk Up There in That Celestial Newsroom
7:03 AM Nov. 20, 2009
4.
Public TV, Radio Stations to Increase Local Investigative Coverage
6:19 AM Nov. 20, 2009
5.
Woods: Plagiarism Never Justified
3:47 PM Nov. 19, 2009
More Recent Articles
6.
What Great Bosses Know about Quiet Leaders
3:39 PM Nov. 19, 2009
7.
Archived Chat: How can Journalism Schools Encourage Innovation?
2:10 PM Nov. 19, 2009
8.
Studying Newspapers in a Time of Change
11:51 AM Nov. 19, 2009
9.
Testing CUNY's New Business Models with Adjusted Assumptions
10:29 AM Nov. 19, 2009
10.
How Do I Protect My Publication Rights?
4:48 AM Nov. 19, 2009
Fewer Recent Articles
Most E-mailed
1.
"Authenticated Streaming" Could Change Broadcast TV
12:00 AM Nov. 20, 2009
2.
Fayetteville editor protests Palin coverage blackout
8:50 AM Nov. 20, 2009
3.
Atlantic, Economist have strikingly similar covers
10:39 AM Nov. 20, 2009
4.
Public TV, Radio Stations to Increase Local Investigative Coverage
6:19 AM Nov. 20, 2009
5.
'Daily Show' Producers, Writers Serious about Comedy & Media Criticism
6:55 AM Nov. 17, 2009
More E-mailed Articles
6.
Murdoch and Microsoft's Bing: A Media Marriage Made in Heaven?
10:55 AM Nov. 18, 2009
7.
WP website staffers losing jobs as newsrooms merge
1:15 PM Nov. 20, 2009
8.
Westword begins reviewing marijuana dispensaries
2:46 PM Nov. 20, 2009
9.
What alternative media need to do to survive
3:46 PM Nov. 20, 2009
10.
Hartford Courant is sued for plagiarism
12:40 PM Nov. 19, 2009
Fewer E-mailed Articles
Recent Comments
1.
Free E-Meters to St. Pete Times subscribers?
on
Poynter's Times Publishing Co. sells Governing
Posted By:
Bradley Fikes
8:25 PM Nov. 20, 2009
2.
Daley's talk
on
Chicago mayor blames media for Oprah's departure
Posted By:
Robb Hill
4:26 PM Nov. 20, 2009
3.
Huh?
on
Chicago mayor blames media for Oprah's departure
Posted By:
Jeffrey Knight
1:40 PM Nov. 20, 2009
4.
T'was the blog post, not the call
on
More on the Post-Dispatch vulgar comment brouhaha
Posted By:
Allan Maurer
1:19 PM Nov. 20, 2009
5.
Not just King ...
on
CNN's John King believes in steering conversations
Posted By:
Alex Dering
12:33 PM Nov. 20, 2009
More Recent Comments
6.
What is King? A group therapist
on
CNN's John King believes in steering conversations
Posted By:
Tom Traubert
12:13 PM Nov. 20, 2009
7.
Tom Traubert is a fake name
on
Fayetteville editor protests Palin coverage blackout
Posted By:
Bradley Fikes
11:08 AM Nov. 20, 2009
8.
What about the issue touched on in the cartoon?
on
Newsday under fire for running "Fillmore" cartoon
Posted By:
Algerco Algerco
10:58 AM Nov. 20, 2009
9.
Great initiative
on
Testing CUNY's New Business Models with Adjusted Assumptions
Posted By:
Reginald Addae
10:51 AM Nov. 20, 2009
10.
Perhaps...
on
High school stops publication of today's newspaper
Posted By:
Mark Phillips
10:14 AM Nov. 20, 2009
Fewer Recent Comments
Recent Tags
1.
Magazines
2.
Media criticism
3.
Careers: Transitions
4.
Business models
5.
Advertising
More Recent Tags
6.
Best Practices
7.
Layoffs/buyouts/staff cuts
8.
Collaborative journalism
9.
Investigative journalism
10.
Newsroom culture
Fewer Recent Tags
Community Activity
Welcome
Toby Muse
to the
Journalism Conversations: TV & Radio
group.
Read
Julian Cordero's
blog post
A simple way we can all share the wealth!
in the
Ethics & Diversity
blog.
Read
Gena Fitzgerald's
comment to the blog post
new media titles?
in the
Online & Multimedia
blog.
View a
photo
that
Bob Howarth
has posted.
Poynter Seminars
Small, in-person training experiences.
1.
A New Curriculum for a New Journalism - Jan. 6-8, 2010
Apply by November 23
2.
Multimedia Journalism for College Educators - February 1-5, 2010
Apply by December 14
3.
NewsU: Write Your Heart Out: The Craft of the Personal Essay - January 25-February 19, 2010
Apply by January 4
All Poynter Seminars
News University
Today's most popular courses on NewsU, Poynter's e-learning site for journalists.
All NewsU Courses
Webinars
Our online classroom is just a click away. Learn more.
All Webinars
Romenesko
Latest News
Reporting
& Writing
Ethics &
Diversity
Leadership
& Business
Visual
Journalism
Online &
Technology
TV &
Radio
Journalism
Education
Poynter Forums
View Forum Post
Topic:
Memos Sent to Romenesko
Date/Time:
8/2/2005 12:09:38 PM
Title:
NYT newsroom integration memo
Posted By:
Jim Romenesko
From: Bill Keller
To: [New York Times newsroom]
Subject: A Message from Bill Keller and Martin Nisenholtz
To the Staff,
Over the past ten years the newsroom of Nytimes.com and the newsroom on 43rd Street have been partners at a distance -- separated administratively, culturally, geographically and financially. We have built bridges -- most notably the Continuous News Desk -- and we have admired each other's work, but we have not been full collaborators. This was probably a healthy arrangement in the formative years, because it allowed our digital operation to flourish, to experiment, to move at its own quick rhythm and focus on the competitive new digital world. The result is, unassailably, the best and most widely read newspaper website in the world, one that consistently wins every award in the field and that continues to attract new readers in droves.
But in those ten years, the world has changed. The digital news operation is now grown up and strong, ready to enlarge its ambitions. The reporting and editing staff at the original newsroom is much more at ease with the Web, more eager to embrace it both as an opportunity for invention and an alternative way to reach our demanding audience. We have a burgeoning video unit that is eager to be a larger presence on the website, at a time when most users of Nytimes.com have graduated to the kind of high-speed delivery that makes video appealing. And all of us appreciate that one of the biggest long-term challenges facing our craft is to invent a digital journalism and new services for our readers that both live up to our high standards and help carry the cost of a great news-gathering organization.
We have concluded that our best chance of meeting that challenge is to
integrate the two newsrooms into one. This will enable us to fully tap the
creative energy of this organization and thus raise digital journalism to
the next level. In the coming weeks, we will be working with editors and
staff in both places to work out details and accomplish a smooth transition.
As you know from an earlier announcement, Jon Landman will oversee this large project for Bill and Jill. He'll have help; more soon about the team that will work with him on this assignment.
The change embodied in this integration will be gradual but important. For quite a few years now, we've sworn allegiance to the modern-sounding doctrine of "platform neutrality" -- meaning we care only about our journalism, not about whether we transmit it to our audience on paper or via streams of electrons. But in practice most of us have been writing and editing newspaper articles, or taking pictures or making charts and graphs for the newspaper, while a few of us have been taking this work and adapting it for the Web.
By integrating the newsrooms we plan to diminish and eventually eliminate the difference between newspaper journalists and Web journalists -- to reorganize our structures and our minds to make Web journalism, in forms that are both familiar and yet-to-be-invented, as natural to us as writing and editing, and to do all of this without losing the essential qualities that make us The Times. Our readers are moving, and so are we.
Until we move into the new building, we cannot physically merge the
newsrooms, but we are looking at ways to promote much more side-by-side cooperation in conceiving and executing journalism. Web producers should routinely participate in the daily conversations where coverage is
launched. Senior editors of the Web should be a presence at all of the
meetings where the masthead, department heads, feature editors, enterprise editors and others hatch plans. In the newsroom at 43rd Street, everyone should come to regard the website as his or her responsibility. That means Jill will be managing editor for news -- not just in the newspaper, but on the website. Susan Chira will be the editor of our foreign report whether it appears in print or on Nytimes.com. And so on. This will take some getting used to, and a large part of Jon's responsibility will be to help us absorb these new responsibilities and make the most of them.
An undertaking on this scale is full of complications, but we are convinced that the time is right for this, and that it cannot be a halfway venture. Judging from the excitement that has arisen in both newsrooms as the magnitude of this sinks in, we know a lot of you already share our
conviction.
Bill Keller
Martin Nisenholtz
View Complete Forum Topic
Latest Poynter Blogs (
See All Blogs
)
Romenesko
Poynter's Times Publishing Co. sells Governing
Al's Morning Meeting
Recommendation for Fewer PAP Screens Sure to Set Off Controversy
E-Media Tidbits
Testing CUNY's New Business Models with Adjusted Assumptions
Ask the Recruiter
How Do I Protect My Publication Rights?
The Biz Blog
Murdoch and Microsoft's Bing: A Media Marriage Made in Heaven?
NewsPay
Study: Newspapers Need to 'Shed Legacy Costs' to Capture Online Ad Spending
Transformation Tracker
Tracking the Future of Advertising
SuperVision
What Great Bosses Know about Quiet Leaders
Diversity at Work
When is Fort Hood Suspect's Faith Relevant in Media Coverage?
Shop
About Poynter
Give to Poynter
The Kennedys: America's Front Page Family
50 years in newspapers
$16.99
Buy Event Tickets
Write Your Way Into College, $149
Saturday, Dec. 9, 2009
Writing With Roy, $149
Saturday, Dec. 12, 2009
Who We Are
& What We Do
History and mission
Where is Poynter?
The Institute's location
Faculty & Staff Listings
Contact information
Poynter on the Record
Faculty in the news
Resource Center
Tips & Bibliographies
Invest in Journalism
Your gifts support Poynter's teaching and provide scholarships.
Advertise
You aim, we deliver
Reach thousands of journalists with your message on Poynter Online.
RSS
|
Podcasts
|
Mobile
|
Twitter
|
Facebook
|
Contact
|
FAQ
Guidelines
|
Corrections
|
Privacy
|
Site Map
|
Press
|
Advertise
© 1995-2009 The Poynter Institute
801 Third Street South | St. Petersburg, FL 33701
Phone (888) 769-6837 | Fax (727) 553-4680
Username
Password
Remember Me
New User? Signup Now
See All Jobs
Add Your Resume
Post Your Job
Become a Member
More media jobs